it was clever and 4th-wall zany hilarious at times but the characters weren't very interesting and the story was excessively fleshed out into narration. a good fun read but not a lot there.
Lawyer Nick Carter thought he had problems - and then two aliens walked into his office. It seems the universe loves Terran pop music - and in their hunger for material, have committed copyright violations of literally galactic proportions. Earth now owns the known universe, and some aliens are ve...
Year Zero is a very funny book and I absolutely loved it. This book makes fun of the music industry and copyright laws. The basic premise is that the rest of the universe is obsessed with Earth music, but before they became familiar with Earth laws they had already pirated so much Earth music that t...
Copyright attorney Nick Carter is stunned by the story he’s told by the brother-sister intergalactic pop stars Frampton and Carly when they arrive unannounced in his office one evening. My recollections of 1977 here on Earth are that it wasn’t an especially significant year for much of anything, but...
2.5 stars. There were truly funny bits in Year Zero, especially in the beginning of the book. There was a lot here that Generation X-ers like me can identify with, and seeing our experiences with technology and pop culture reflected back was pretty entertaining.The main problem with the book, thou...
Most of humanity would argue that as a species, humans do pretty well for themselves when it comes to the arts. We have our highlights - Mozart, Monet, Michelangelo - and an entire group of artists we would prefer to pretend never happened. Yet, all in all, one could argue that humans know art. Then...
Cuando empecé a leer este libro, aunque me llamó la atención el tema, sentía que iba a ser un bodrio. Uno de esos intentos desesperados de autores por hacer algo de ciencia ficción gracioso a la Hitchhikers. Pero aún con ese prejuicio que tenía le dí una oportunidad y vaya que me sorprendió. Desde e...
Cute sf read. Fun premise, lots of tech culture, pop music, and legal references, and it's clear that the author has read and liked Douglas Adams. Characters (particularly the protagonist) were pretty shallow.
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